What causes a person to be a person? — Waya
:chin: True...As a person we change over time and circumstance. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
So maybe personhood must in part be physical?All of those things and more make up who we are as a person, beyond the science of our genes or in concert with our genes but it definitely makes up what I would consider our "consciousness". — ArguingWAristotleTiff
All human beings have a self (personal and social) identity:
1) Personal identity is the set of heritable attributes which remain essentially unchanged throughout the course of a person's life.
2) Social identity is the set of social attributes which have their basis in social learning and change throughout the course of a person's life. — Galuchat
All of the properties you have is what makes you YOU. This includes the genetic makeup that started you off, and has changed over the years (yes, our DNA changes over time), as well as all the experiences you've had. Alter one property, or one experience and it's not you.What causes a person to be a person? — Waya
Does a person's identity change when they suffer from a brain disease (e.g., dementia) or a mental illness (e.g., dissociative identity disorder)? — Galuchat
I have always been of the opinion that personhood, as a concept, is almost entirely vacuous once it is removed from the legal domain. — Akanthinos
If an elderly human being has dementia (entailing distortions, then loss, of autobiographical memory), their social identity changes, but their personal identity (heritable attributes) remains essentially unchanged.
The self and person schemata of the individual with dementia may be modified initially, but ultimately they are lost. And the person schema of their family members and acquaintances would be accommodated (modified) or assimilated (extended), resulting in a change of social identity for the afflicted individual. But self (combined personal and social) identity is not lost unless a human being is no longer recognised by one's self and others. — Galuchat
So, given that identity loss is a possibility, should personhood be defined in terms of social identity, or only in terms of human nature (i.e., genetic predisposition)? — Galuchat
That is an interesting perspective from a legal viewpoint. So maybe what is implied is that their are different kinds of persons?In legal ontology, personhood is a sort of mark of nobility, which sets apart certain entities from the rest. It's a bit like the object/subject distinction: a useful fiction. It doesn't matter if we colour a bit out of the lines with it... And it is a selective quality : a child is not a person re liability under US law, but is a person re protection under the law from the moment he is born viably. — Akanthinos
A person is the physical being who passes through time and during that passage maintains enough continuity to maintain self-recognition and be recognizable to others. Most of us (a large percentage, fill in the percentage to suit yourself) manage this passage which ends at death. — Bitter Crank
At each stage, you are moving more from something given, to something that's ongoingly self-created by the person. The social roles are intermediary, in that they are partly thrust on us, partly something we choose (whereas our biology is totally a given hand of cards that we're dealt, and our creative, individualistic manifestations are totally self-built, the result of choices made in the present - choices not necessarily reflected in self-consciousness, but rather choices in a broader sense, made by the total package and usually reflected in self-consciousness). — gurugeorge
So we are fundamentally the same person, but changeable. — Waya
That is an interesting perspective from a legal viewpoint. So maybe what is implied is that their are different kinds of persons? — Waya
I think that the vagueness of the concept of personhood forces us, ethically, to err on the side of generosity : better remain open to the idea that something might be someone in principle, so as not to deny the existence of alternate form of subjectivities. — Akanthinos
I think that the vagueness of the concept of personhood forces us, ethically, to err on the side of generosity: better remain open to the idea that something might be someone in principle, so as not to deny the existence of alternate form of subjectivities. — Akanthinos
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